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Periphrastic vs Ambagitory - What's the difference?

periphrastic | ambagitory |

As adjectives the difference between periphrastic and ambagitory

is that periphrastic is expressed in more words than are necessary while ambagitory is (obsolete) periphrastic or circumlocutory.

periphrastic

English

Adjective

(-)
  • Expressed in more words than are necessary.
  • * 1916 , , An Essay Toward a History of Shakespeare in Norway
  • As poetry it does not measure up to Aasen; as translation it is periphrastic , arbitrary, not at all faithful.
  • * 1940 , :
  • "That was a way of putting it—not very satisfactory/ A periphrastic study in a worn-out poetical fashion/ Leaving one still with the intolerable wrestle / With words and meanings."
  • Indirect in naming an entity; circumlocutory.
  • * 1870 , , Vril: The Power of the Coming Race
  • In writing, they deem it irreverent to express the Supreme Being [… and] in conversation they generally use a periphrastic epithet, such as the All-Good .
  • (grammar) Characterized by periphrasis.
  • “The daughter of the man” may be used as a periphrastic synonym for “the man’s daughter”.

    ambagitory

    English

    Adjective

    (en adjective)
  • (obsolete) periphrastic or circumlocutory
  • * 1814 Sir Walter Scott, Waverley, p151
  • But without further tyranny over my readers, or display of the extent of my own reading, I shall content myself with borrowing a single incident from the memorable hunting at Lude, commemorated in the ingenious Mr. Gunn’s essay on the Caledonian Harp, and so proceed in my story with all the brevity that my natural style of composition, partaking of what scholars call the periphrastic and ambagitory , and the vulgar the circumbendibus, will permit me.
  • * 1826 Sir Walter Scott, Woodstock or the cavalier: a tale of the year sixteen hundred and fifty-one, Archibald Constable and Co., p75
  • He read, long and attentively, various tedious and embarassed letters, in which the writers, placing before him the glory of God, and the freedom and liberties of England, as their supreme ends, could not, by all the ambigatory expressions they made use of, prevent the shrewd eye of Markham Everard from seeing, that self-interest and views of ambitions were the principal moving-springs at the bottom of their plots.
  • * 1841 "Useless Machinery of the Registration Bill," The Lancet, Volume 1, November 14, p268
  • Comment on the interpretation clause would be superfluous; its ambigatory phraseology, and all the difficulties of the subsequent registration, are the necessary result of the attempt to register the quacks with the regular practitioners of the country [...]
  • * 1979 Alastair Fowler, "Genre and the Literary Canon," New Literary History , Vol. 11, No. 1, Anniversary Issue: II (Autumn, 1979), pp. 97-119
  • He multiplied allusions to serious romance predecessors, introduced romantic poems and songs both as quotations and as intrafictional events, explicitly followed an "ambagitory " narrative method, and continually emphasized the romantic character of landscapes [...]